Also, ignored is a 1990 NYS Department of
Health report alerting bureaucrats about fluoride's potential harm to kidney
patients, diabetics and the fluoride hypersensitive even at optimal levels.

Thecompanion
document and its references to approve Medicaid funds be spent on fluoridation, reveals legislators and pro-fluoridation activists have been mislead

1) The companion document says, “Analysis of dental procedures
in predominantly fluoridated community water versus nonfluoridated drinking
water communities in New YorkState suggests savings of $24 per
child.”

However, this statement is based on one reference -
a flawed study (Kumar et al., “Geographic Variation in Medicaid Claims for
Dental Procedures in New
YorkState: Role of
Fluoridation under Contemporary Conditions,” Public Health Reports Sept-Oct
2010).

Kumar uses Medicaid data but fails to explain that
most NYS dentists refuse to treat Medicaid patients. Low-income New Yorkers in
extreme dental pain seek urgent care in hospital emergency rooms where their
infection isn’t classified as “dental.” So these cases don’t show up in Kumar’s
calculations.

Kumar, himself, explains more
limitations within
his paper He writes, “This study was subject to several
limitations…[and] one
should be cautious in attributing this geographic variation solely to water
fluoridation.”

Further, DrBicuspid.com reports that "Some 23 New York state general dentists and six orthodontists received $13.2 million in Medicaid payments in 2012 for services that appeared unnecessary or may not have been performed at all, according to a new report by federal health investigators." This type of information is not included in Kumar's calculations.

In another paper published
in the Journal of the American Dental Association
(Jan 2012) , Kumar et al, reports that [despite NYS’s
72% fluoridation rate] emergency
treatment for NYS toddlers' severe tooth decay has grown substantially in
numbers and costs; many toddlers required general anesthesia. The reason: “There is a limited number of dentists willing to
treat patients younger than 6 and/or accept Medicaid," admits Kumar, et
al.

Another
Kumar study published in the Journal of Public Health Dentistry (Winter 2003) reports that severe tooth decay was
responsible for two thirds of hospital visits by children under six in New YorkState. Also, In New York City, 100% fluoridated since 1965, more children required
cavity-related hospitalizations, proportionately, than two of New YorkState's largest non-fluoridated counties, Suffolk and Nassau (Long
island) whether payment was
made by Medicaid or privately.

In 2009,
NY City spent about $24
million on fluoridation annually (Page
2 ). Yet tooth decay is
rampant in NYC’s low-income population Further, NYS DoH statistics show
that highly-fluoridated NYS counties don’t have less tooth decay and
fluoridation has not leveled out tooth decay betweenlower and higher income children in 2004(The following two charts are based on NYS
Dep’t of Health statistics)

The above chart shows no relationship between fluoridation and
less tooth decay; but NYS 3rd-graders cavities are related to consumption of sugar sweetened beverages (SSB),
according to Kumar et al. (“Sugar Sweetened Beverage (SSB) Consumption and
Caries Experience.” (page
61 of abstracts presented at the 2014 National Oral Health Conference).
They concluded that.
Future interventions need to focus on educating parents and children on
negative oral health effect of SSB.

The math claiming fluoridation saves money isn’t accurate according
to Thiessen and Ko in the International
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health (March 2015)who
write: “Recent economic evaluations of CWF [community water fluoridation] contain
defective estimations of both costs and benefits.” They concluded “Minimal
correction reduced the savings to $3 per person per year for a best-case
scenario, but this savings is eliminated by the estimated cost of treating
dental fluorosis [white spotted, yellow, brown and/or pitted teeth due to
fluoride overdose].”

Mild fluorosis is often dismissed as not harmful. But NYS
dentist Elivir Dincer, writing in the NYS Dental Journals says, “Such
changes in the tooth’s appearance can affect the child’s self-esteem.”

2) The MRT
companion document says “Systematic reviews of the scientific evidence have
concluded that community water fluoridation is effective in decreasing dental caries
prevalence and severity.” Three citations are used to support this claim -
(a,b,c below) but they fail to prove fluoridation effectiveness.

“Given
the level of interest surrounding the issue of public water fluoridation, it is
surprising to find that little high quality research has been undertaken. As
such, this review should provide both researchers and commissioners of research
with an overview of the
methodological limitations of previous research.”

Excerpts: “We are concerned about the continuing
misinterpretations of the evidence and think it is important that decision
makers are aware of what the review really found. As such, we urge interested
parties to read the review conclusions in full.We were unable to discover any reliable good-quality
evidence in the fluoridation literature world-wide.

What evidence we found suggested that water fluoridation
was likely to have a beneficial effect, but that the range could be anywhere
from a substantial benefit to a slight disbenefit to children's teeth.This
beneficial effect comes at the expense of an increase in the prevalence of
fluorosis (mottled teeth). The quality of this evidence

was poor.”

“The evidence about reducing inequalities in dental
health was of poor quality, contradictory and unreliable.

The
Task Force also admitted it couldn’t evaluate how race, ethnicity and total
fluoride intake influenced fluoridation effectiveness because of limited data. “Few studies provided data on
socioeconomic status, and most studies had measurement issues; many didn’t
blind examiners and there was a lack of consistency among indices used to
measure caries."

“Included
studies provided limited data on other sources of fluoride or race or
ethnicity. Thus, the extent to which these factors influenced the effectiveness
of CWF could not be evaluated…[and] there was not enough evidence to clearly determine the effects of
community water fluoridation on health disparities between groups.

“Quality
issues across studies included failure to measure or acknowledge relevant
factors such as the contribution of fluoride from other sources or access to
dental care. Most of the studies also had measurement issues; many did not
blind the examiners, and across studies there was a lack of consistency among
indices used to measure caries and fluorosis,” they write.

c) Researchers
from the University
of York criticized the third reference (Griffin et al.
“Effectiveness of Fluoride in Preventing Cavities in Adults.” J Dent Research
2007)

“This review concluded that fluoride helps prevent caries in
adults of all ages. The authors' conclusions appear to follow from the results
presented, although the
paucity of more recent studies and poor quality of the included studies limit
their reliability and relevance to current populations.”

In fact,
when NYS Dept of Health dentist J Kumar published a study to show that
fluorosed teeth had less tooth decay, he included national data that shows
that, as fluoridation rates increase, fluorosis rates go up but that decay
rates stay the same.Here’s a graph of
those findings.

Besides the limitations of
the references described above, more evidence points to the lack of valid data
showing fluoridation is safe or effective.

--- After
reviewing all available fluoridation studies, the independent and trusted
UK-based Cochrane group of researchers reported in 2015, that they
could not find any quality evidence to prove fluoridation changes the “existing
differences in tooth decay across socioeconomic groups.” Neither could they
find valid evidence that fluoride reduces adults’ cavity rates nor that
fluoridation cessation increases tooth decay.

-- A 1990 NYS
Department of Health report alerted bureaucrats that fluoride can
potentially harm kidney patients, diabetics and the fluoride hypersensitive
even at optimal levels. But it is ignored.

The US
National Toxicology Program (NTP) is reviewing hundreds of studies linking
fluoride to adverse brain effects. The report won't be finalized until 2018 and
may signal an end to the fluoridation program nation-wide. At least 314 studies investigated
fluoride’s effects on the brain and nervous system. This includes 181 animal
studies, 112 human studies, and 21 cell
studies. Fifty studies link fluoride to children’s lower IQ.

The majority of
these studies were published after the 2006 National Research Council’s
fluoride toxicology report concluded, "It
is apparent that fluorides have the ability to interfere with the functions of
the brain."

While you may have heard the oft-repeated CDC slogan that fluoridation
is one of the Ten Great Public Health Achievements in the
20th Century, The
CDC also reports the following:

“In the earliest days of fluoride research, investigators
hypothesized that fluoride affects enamel and inhibits dental caries (cavities)
only when incorporated into developing dental enamel...” but now CDC admits that: “Fluoride works
primarily after teeth have erupted…”

CDC also
admits that

“The prevalence of dental
caries in a population is not inversely related to the concentration of
fluoride in enamel, and a higher concentration of enamel fluoride is not
necessarily more efficacious in preventing dental caries.”

and

"Saliva is a major carrier of topical fluoride. The
concentration of fluoride in ductal saliva, as it is secreted from salivary
glands, is low --- approximately 0.016 parts per million (ppm) in areas where
drinking water is fluoridated and 0.006 ppm in nonfluoridated areas. This concentration of fluoride
is not likely to affect cariogenic activity."

Fluoride is not a nutrient or essential for healthy teeth – meaning
consuming a fluoride-free diet does not cause cavities. Fluoride is a drug with
side effects which shouldn’t be funded by Medicaid, prescribed by a legislator,
delivered by water engineer, and dosed based on thirst and not age, weight,
health without monitoring for side effects and overdose symptoms.

END**Dental Therapists need just
two years training to do simple dentistry.Other developed countries have successfully employed DTs for decades.
Rural Alaska and Minnesota legalized DTs, other states are
trying.No New Yorker is, or ever was,
fluoride-deficient.Many are
“dentist-deficient” for many reasons which floods our Emergency rooms with
dental patients in severe pain costingtaxpayers often ten times the amount of a simple
filling – wiping out any projected “cost savings” of
fluoridation.DTs will go into mouths and
areas where Dentists refuse to go and can charge less, having less student debt
and will accept Medicaid, unlike most New York dentists. Promoting fluoridation
wastes money and endangers workers and water-drinkers health.Legalizing Dental Therapists costs nothing
but will lower dental costs to individuals and Medicaid. Articles supporting
Dental Therapists: